

Elena Zoric is murdered, her body concealed beside a stream in North London. Her phone lies nearby, the last number dialled was to the woman who had rescued her from sex trafficking: Metropolitan Police Detective Inspector Grace Archer.
Archer desperately wants to lead the murder investigation but her new boss, Chief Inspector Les Fletcher, makes it very clear its out of her jurisdiction.
Then the thirty-year-old remains of a woman are found in the attic of an abandoned house, the victim dying in similar circumstances to Elena Zoric.
But Archer’s North London colleagues have bigger priorities than the murder of ‘a drugged-up prostitute.’
Archer needs answers. Who killed Elena? Why did she call Archer moments from her death? And what rules must she break to stop a killer in his tracks?

David Fennell was born and raised in Belfast. He left for London at the age of eighteen and jobbed as a chef, waiter and bartender for several years before starting a career in writing for the software industry. David has played rugby for Brighton and studied Creative Writing at the University of Sussex. He is married and lives in Brighton.
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My thoughts: I enjoyed the previous books featuring DI Grace Archer and her team, and this one also brings back true crime podcaster Mallory Jones. A series of brutal murders going back decades, taking place around the country come to light as Grace and her team look into the murder of a young sex worker and the similar death of a young woman whose remains are found in an empty house.
The murderer has picked up young sex workers and then killed them with a bolt gun to the chest. A brutal and terrifying death. And he seems to be ramping up as another murder in Berwick-upon-Tweed happens only a few short weeks after Elena’s.
This was gripping and intelligent crime writing, the twists and the pace of the killings, the discovery of past crimes that bear the same MO, the obnoxious social media “personality”, the idiot nepo detective, it’s all so enjoyable and well done.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in this blog tour, but all opinions remain my own.
































